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First public reading of COAL: The Musical (work
in progress), performed at The
Lensic, Santa Fe, New Mexico. Credit: Kate Russell, 2013. All rights reserved.

Kristin
Rothballer’s job title
is ‘Director of Strategic
Miracles’ for COAL—a
new musical on climate change that debuts in San Francisco in October 2016. Based in New Mexico but with
members and partners across the USA, COAL is intended as a wake-up call that puts
the performing arts at the forefront of mobilizing collective action on fossil
fuels and the environment.

Activists frequently draw
people into movements by articulating an urgent need for change and tapping
into their fear, anger and frustration. The climate change movement has done
this by using scientific data to draw attention to the destructive forces of
global warming. But
with the 2015 Paris climate agreement this movement seems poised to make a
fundamental shift—from making the case for action to diving into the specifics
of addressing root causes. And
that means keeping fossil fuels like coal firmly in the ground.

To aid in this task, COAL doesn’t
focus on protesting against the giants of the mining industry. Instead, its
goal is culture change—helping to create a stronger foundation for redesigning
the way we live. And that requires working with the emotional complexity of climate
change, cultivating meaningful relationships, and giving people opportunities
to gain confidence in their creative powers. COAL uses theater, story, music
and song to nurture and support these processes.

Rothballer
first heard about COAL when she was living on a ranch outside San Francisco, feeling burned out by
years of traditional activism on climate change. That was COAL’s attraction as
something different, something that was more deeply rooted in spirituality and
love for the world. “Reverence,” she told me
in an interview, “I love nature and people. I love this magical planet Earth,
floating around in the universe. I care about it and want to protect it. It was
from that place that I set out on this path in the first place. But through
years of activism and trying to engage other people, I lost some sense of that
along the way."

The same story
is echoed by her colleagues, like COAL Founder and Artistic Director Molly Sturges. When I spoke to her,
she explained how most of the meetings she attended were focused on getting
people to sign petitions. Rarely was anyone asked “Why have you come here?”
This experience nudged her to dig more deeply into her own motivations for action:
“When this project got started I felt a calling—a spiritual and moral
calling—to address climate change as a mom, and as a community member.” And
that meant focusing on values before embarking on specific actions: ‘what do we
share in common, and how do we realize our values together in practice?’

It’s here that the arts have
a vital role to play because they encourage the expression of people’s deepest
feelings and capacities. As COAL’s Producing Director Jaimie
Mayer
put it to me, “How do we create a
brilliant piece of theater that is going to move all of these people into
feeling they have a voice around these issues, and with that, move into being
involved and taking action?” In saying this, she was also clear that the
musical must stand on its own as a work of art that appeals to a mass audience rather
than attracting only a small segment of activists on climate change.

Mayer is emphatic about her
belief in ‘artivism’—the importance of the arts to social and
environmental justice. “I
think the performing arts have a power that nothing else really has,” she told
me, “Look at the civil rights movement and other movements and the ways the
arts have been attached to them.” Mayer imagines that the memory of a song or a
character in the musical will inspire people to get out of out of their comfort
zones and take action in new ways.

This is
important because climate change can be hard for most people to connect with on
a personal level, since the scale and complexity of the issues keeps them at a
distance. The arts can address this by “making intimate the world” according to
Sturges. COAL aims to steer people into connecting with issues emotionally by presenting the stories and voices of people, animals and
trees, and of coal itself.

COAL tells
the story of divided loyalties in the fictional mining community of Hopewell
Junction. The musical takes the audience into the lives of a student, a former
miner, a mother, a healer and other characters who are grappling with the tensions that exist between the needs of different groups, the
discomfort of challenging the status quo, and the decision-making dilemmas on energy
consumption that everybody faces.

But COAL isn’t simply a performance for consumption by a passive
audience. The musical is meant to
encourage people to create their own adaptations in schools, faith-based
venues, and around the dinner table. Both audience and performers will be supported
to reflect on their relationships to people, community, planet and climate
change itself, and to become active participants in changing the way we live
together.
In this sense, COAL resembles The
Vagina Monologues—a piece of theater that gives
an intimacy to larger topics and acts as a catalyst for conversations on a much
bigger scale.

Performances
are stepping-stones in building the relationships required for collective action,
so local COAL organizers will have access to a menu of pre and post-performance
activities designed to foster dialogue, learning, connection and
creative expression. An interactive website
will map out and connect what COAL calls ‘SPARKS’—actions on climate change that
are sparked by the musical. COAL
toolkits will support organizers to make people feel welcome, create talking
circles, navigate conflict, and work together in ways that acknowledge that all
people bring gifts and value to the movement.

A core aim
of COAL is to root the climate change movement more deeply in wholehearted
relationships, rather than in mechanical or transactional actions and
connections like petition-signing. The emphasis is on the audience and
performers as co-creators of regenerative ways of
living, rather than as sleepwalking consumers of the extractive and
depleting norms of the status quo.

Too
many people are disassociated from the destructive nature of dominant forms of energy
production, so COAL becomes a platform to pose a key question about the future:
“where do we want our energy to come from?” Fossil fuels have powered economic
growth and helped societies unleash enormous human creativity, but they are
lethal. As Sturges learned in reading Coal: A Human History, fossil fuels are sequestered in the
earth for good reason—when we dig them up we unleash life-destroying forces.

What
does this kind of behavior tell us about ourselves? Where’s the love in this
way of living? And what responsibilities do those in the rich world have who
are the biggest energy consumers? Arriving at the energy transformations
that are necessary involves much more than working with science and the intellect
to create renewable alternatives. Systems change is rooted in culture change;
it involves reconfiguring our
relationships to ourselves, to each other and to the planet, and seeing ourselves as co-creators of a
different future.

One
of the best ways to do this is through direct experience, which is why COAL is
so important. It will offer lots of opportunities for people to experience creative
collective action as a joyful and restorative process. Culture change is hard
graft, and it will take us to some dark and painful places. Yet art and music remind
us that love, play, experiment, magic and beauty are vital for social
transformation, and they invite us to hold spaces in our activism for all of
these things.

The
call to keep fossil fuels in the ground is ultimately a call to come together
and co-create a radically different way of resourcing and enriching our lives. Curtain
up.

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